LWCF Set to Expire: House Advances Bill to Reauthorize

The Land and Water Conservation Fund has protected access to public lands for decades. Sixteen days from its expiration, the House of Representatives voted to reauthorize the LWCF. Read more…

The current funding lapse means no new revenue from offshore drilling can go into the existing fund. Without continued funding, that means upcoming projects the LWCF already authorized could stop. That said, there are multiple bills still before Congress that could permanently reauthorize the LWCF.

Despite its bipartisan ideal, Arizona Democrat Raúl M. Grijalva, ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee, called the LWCF “political football” earlier this month while working on a deal to secure future funding for the program.

Prior to the national fund’s expiration date, Senator Jon Tester (D-Montana), Rep. Brian Fitzgerald (R-Pennsylvania), and other stakeholders organized a press call to ask Congress to save the LWCF.

Still, Congress failed to reauthorize the fund in time.

How LWCF Gets Conservation Money

Congress created the LWCF in 1964 as a bipartisan fund to safeguard natural areas, water resources, and cultural heritage in all states. Funds have touched major tourist destinations like Rocky Mountain, Grand Canyon, and Great Smoky Mountain national parks. Local LWCF grants also go toward protecting forests, wildlife habitat, critical drinking water, and easements.

Extraction industry revenue funds the LWCF. Each year, energy companies drilling for oil and gas put into the national store more than $900 million in royalties paid on the Outer Continental Shelf.

5 Projects Highlight Importance of the Land and Water Conservation Fund

The Land and Water Conservation Fund is critical to the American experience and will expire on September 30, 2018. The House is moving forward to reauthorize the fund, but that still might not be enough to save it. Read more…

According to a real-time counter on the LWCF website, parks around the country have already lost over $1 million in funds for conservation since the fund’s expiration Sunday. LWCF reports there’s a $30 billion backlog of federal conservation needs for vulnerable places like the Florida Everglades. State governments also report needing $27 billion in LWCF funds for eligible local parks and recreation projects.

Outdoor recreational activities like hunting, fishing, camping, and biking contribute $887 billion to the nation’s annual economy. LWCF supporters argue it contributes to protecting this robust sector of the economy, which is also tied to supporting 7.6 million jobs.